[deleted]
Amos,
A very important point you bring up is that of "space being made out of the same thing as the matter in it." I noted that Einstein said, "there is no space absent of field."
I'm curious about other points in your essay. For example you say "there would have to be evidence to disprove [it from bit]" I would think that one would ask for evidence to prove it. The artwork is a very nice example, but it is an analogy, not a proof.
I'm confused by your claim that "the info is part made out of bits and part of the sum or big picture, and also that the laws of reality are nothing more themselves and compositions of bits" I certainly agree with you that the 'bit' take on the world is *useful* for some purposes, just as the derived concept of temperature is useful. But the world is not created from derived concepts, just conveniently described by them.
I was not aware of Fisher information before your essay. A review of Frieden's book on Fisher info claims it is at best mathematically equivalent to orthodoxy and adds nothing empirical, while it is associated with "some really bad metaphysics". Do you believe that is a mistaken interpretation?
You seem to be presenting a speculative approach to understanding information, and rightly claim that science is pursued by initially granting the truth of some statement, at least temporarily. So I am uncertain what you believe and what you are merely testing as speculative science. You've read my essay so you know that I believe that energy exchange produces information when the energy changes the state of (writes into) some system.
From comments above it seems that you base your idea of 'physical' information on Bell's Alice and Bob experiments. It is worth the effort to ask yourself what conclusions one would draw from these experiments if Bell had not stated his theorem "proving" that local reality is incompatible with the results. While most physicists apparently accept his theorem as the final word, there are still ongoing analyses of what is, in essence, a very simplistic theorem.
In any case, you have written a very nice essay. Thanks for participating, and good luck with your career!
Edwin Eugene Klingman